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Moreover, by way of providing himself with a style of discourse which was adapted, like a musical instrument, to his mode of life and the grandeur of his sentiments, he often made an auxiliary string of Anaxagoras, subtly mingling, as it were, with his rhetoric the dye of natural science. It was from natural science, as the divine Plato says,1 that he ‘acquired his loftiness of thought and perfectness of execution, in addition to his natural gifts,’ and by applying what he learned to the art of speaking, he far excelled all other speakers.

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